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Interview with Pat Kreitlow
Lizbeth Ager
Pat Kreitlow may have signed
off as TV-13 news anchor seven months ago, but folks in the
Chippewa Valley will be seeing a lot more of him in the coming
year. Kreitlow, 41, recently announced his candidacy for the
23rd State Senate District seat currently occupied by Republican
Dave Zien. Motivated to run by the need to address education,
health care and political reform, he maintains that the current
legislature has lost sight of its constituents' real needs.
The 23rd District extends into southern Barron
County, covering the townships of Dovre, Sioux Creek, Dallas
and the Village of Dallas. Kreitlow, who once lived in Rice
Lake and worked for WAQE radio station, will speak at a meeting
of the Barron County Democrats on January 19th. As WEAU TV-13
news anchor for nearly ten years, he is a friendly, familiar
face to almost everyone, and no doubt will prove a tough opponent
for Zien. The contest promises to be lively.
Pat Kreitlow graciously granted me an interview;
you can read his responses below. And for a wealth of information
about his positions, check out kreitlowforsenate.com,
and of course, Kreitlow
Corner, his blog. It's . . . hotter than a pepper sprout.
Lizbeth
Ager: Tell us about yourself. What made you decide
to run for the State Senate?
Pat
Kreitlow: I decided to run for State Senate after years
of frustration seeing our elected officials take no significant
action on two moral issues. First, the growing number of people
suffering for lack of health care security. No one in America
should be just have to worry about financial ruin because of
one illness, one accident or one layoff. Yet 45 million Americans
do have those kind of worries. That's a moral failing on the
part of our leaders, many of whom took office a decade ago claiming
they had better ideas for health care access. It turns out they
didn't, otherwise more than 300,000 Wisconsin residents wouldn't
be without health insurance right now.
The other great moral failing of today's career politicians
in Madison revolves around education. An educated workforce
is the cornerstone of a growing economy. And yet today's legislative
leaders have made education a villain. They paint teachers as
greedy. They paint public schools --Wisconsin public schools!--
as an enemy that needs to be replaced by a model based on corporate
profits. When politicians deride the value of a good education,
it's time for the politicians to go.
L.A.:
What strengths will you bring to the office?
Pat
Kreitlow: First and foremost, dedication to find solutions
to problems. That's what I expect of our elected officials:
help people, find solutions. You can't help people when you're
busy pulling rugs out from under them.
I bring my life's experiences that include growing up in a poor
family dependent on welfare, working hard in public schools,
attending UW-Eau Claire and rising through the ranks to the
job I held at TV-13 for so many years. It's a story that illustrates
the value of good schools and hard work, but also reminds people
that without a certain level of safety nets for children in
poor families, they will never be able to attain the kind of
success that anyone in America should be able to dream of.
L.A.:
Short of hanging a flag on the back of your
motorcycle, how will you connect with the grassroots in the
23rd district?
Pat Kreitlow: One voter at a time. This is
very much a shoe leather campaign. When I first thought about
running a lot of Madison experts envisioned a campaign filled
with a million TV commercials. I don't see it that way. People
around here already know Dave Zien, and they already know me.
They don't need TV images; they need to talk to us. And when
they do, they'll easily figure out which person is more likely
to represent their values and get things done that have been
neglected in Madison for far too long.
L.A.: In talking to voters, what
is your sense of what they want and deserve in a State Senator?
Pat Kreitlow: Someone willing to work for them.
Someone willing to sit at the table, talk to people and solve
problems. That's governing. Compare governing to politics, where
someone jumps up from the table, throws mud at everyone around
the table, and stomps away without solving anything. We want
our State Senators to take their jobs seriously and work for
us.
L.A.: Your opponent has long entertained
controversial issues such as
bringing the death penalty to Wisconsin, as well as concealed
weapon permits. Which issues has he been neglecting?
Pat Kreitlow: Controversial issues aren't necessarily
bad issues, unless you're on the wrong side. Now Dave Zien has
never been afraid of a controversial fight, but unfortunately
for us, he's usually fighting common sense. And common sense
tells us that instead of being fixated on personal pet issues
that affect almost no one, our officials should be paying attention
to making health care more affordable, bring stability to school
funding, reducing the corrupting influence of special interests
on our politicians, and making sure corporate polluters aren't
running roughshod over our natural resources. I'm not seeing
that from our current legislative leaders.
L.A.:
Wisconsinites can no longer boast of clean government, and you
say that mere Band-Aid solutions will not do. What happened,
and what can we do to clean government up again?
Pat Kreitlow: Nothing really "happened"
so much as one party gained so much control (at the state and
national levels) that it repeated what has always happened in
American history when one party gets entrenched: it starts doing
anything it can to stay that way. And when it starts bending
or breaking the rules in that quest for cash, the voters eventually
recognize it and make a change.
We can do more to make campaign contributions as transparent
and real-time as possible. There's nothing wrong with anyone
--rich or poor-- giving money to a candidate or politician.
But we have to make sure everyone can see it, and draw their
own conclusion about whether the donor is getting something
in return.
We also have to do more to ensure that redistricting remains
as fair a process as possible. What Tom DeLay did in Texas was
so far past the line that it serves as a wake-up call in Wisconsin
and elsewhere to make sure no one person or party can abuse
the rights of voters to fairly choose their representatives
in Congress and the legislature.
L.A.:
You list health care reform as one of your
top priorities, and indeed, it tops the lists of most constituents,
who face one form of health insecurity or another. What kind
of health care reform do we need, and what should the State
Senate be doing about it?
Pat Kreitlow: We should be looking for ways
to share our resources and share the benefits that come from
sticking together. It's that kind of "cooperative"
spirit that helped Wisconsin's farmers grow this state in its
earliest days. But Republicans seek to divide us rather than
bring us together. Take Health Savings Accounts, an idea that
could be a good part of a larger package of overall reforms.
Instead, they want to enact only the
HSA's. Well, that's nothing more than "redlining"
everyone who's not healthy and wealthy, and ensuring they'll
pay higher and higher premiums. That's a horrible concept.
Government does not have to provide the health insurance, and
government does not have to be the health care provider. But
a state government can use the cooperative concept to bundle
us together and say to the private market: you want us? Give
us your best package. That's just one method. There are others
that can ensure people with low and medium incomes can have
access to an affordable bare-bones catastrophic and preventative
policy, and let employers continue to compete over providing
other types of coverage.
In other words, there's no shortage of possible solutions, just
a shortage of action in Madison. That's about to change.
L.A. When I asked voters what they expected
of their state senator,
environmental topics kept coming to the fore. Do we need a Public
Intervenor brought back? Do we have a sensible forestry policy?
Groundwater policy? Are we doing all we can to conserve Wisconsin's
natural bounty?
Pat
Kreitlow: Yes, we need to restore the Public Intervenor.
We can't do enough to ensure that our natural treasures are
protected and passed down to our children and grandchildren.
Instead, we have State Senators forming special committee to
investigate "atrocities" that they claim are handled
in a "Gestapo-like" manner. That should trouble anyone
who's concerned that lawmakers are working too hard to bend
the rules for corporate polluters and large campaign contributors.
L.A.:
Energy prices are soaring. What can Wisconsin do to help its
citizens adjust to new energy realities?
Pat Kreitlow: Governor Doyle and others have
already taken the lead in declaring that Wisconsin will be a
leader in attaining more of its future energy from renewable
resources. Unlike certain politicians who work so hard to protect
"Big Oil," I remember the energy crisis of the mid-70s,
and I'm dedicated to making sure that Wisconsin continues to
be a leader in researching new technologies and more efficient
ways to use energy.
L.A.
A voter wants to know how we can "get the DNR off our backs."
How is the DNR doing?
Pat
Kreitlow: I like to say that almost everyone in Wisconsin
is an environmentalist, proud of natural resources. . . at least
until the DNR comes knocking at their own door! Truth is, we
have some pretty dedicated people at the local DNR level, but
they're being overridden by some pretty inconsistent rulings
coming out of the central office in Madison. Fortunately, Governor
Doyle and others have worked to make the DNR more efficient
on permit applications over the past couple of years. Now, we
need to make the DNR more "customer friendly" and
working with people on crafting environmentally friendly
solutions, not just writing citations and walking away.
L.A.:
What will you to do help restore comity to the Wisconsin
State Senate?
Pat
Kreitlow: Simple. Change one of its senators. There
are some good Republican people in Madison. And we're going
to put one more good Democratic person in the capitol this year.
Together, we can talk about things that will WORK, and not just
sling mud at each other. I'm not afraid to share credit across
party lines. But to get to that kind of credit, you have to
work together first.
L.A.:
Increasingly, we hear of rising tuition and rumored privatization
of
certain aspects of the UW system. Whatever happened to the Wisconsin
Idea--the notion that education should be available to every
home in the state?
Pat Kreitlow: The "Wisconsin Idea" is alive,
but it's not well. It's been endangered by lawmakers who fail
to value the UW as our state's economic engine and its primary
research vehicle for creating the next generation of jobs, workers
and inventions. That does not mean we back up the money truck
and bankrupt the treasury. It means we spend wisely including
and especially in the area of financial aid so that Wisconsin's
best and brightest stay in Wisconsin, work
in Wisconsin and eventually create jobs in Wisconsin.
L.A.:
Of course, we all want to know what your favorite Johnny
Cash song is, and why.
Pat Kreitlow: That's easy. "Jackson."
I know, it's a duet, and there are plenty of others who will
vote for "Ring of Fire," "A Boy Named Sue,"
and others. But it's good sassy song between a playful couple.
(Not to bring the room down, but if it were up to me, every
kid would have to watch the video to "Hurt,"
and study the lyrics to understand what drug addiction really
does to someone. Cash is a master storyteller, teacher and Christian
who surely ain't playin' no harp up there, I'm sure!)
L.A.: Can you tell about the best car you
ever had?
Pat
Kreitlow: My favorite was the '01 Jeep Wrangler I had
for a couple of years before the necessities of life required
a bigger truck. (Now we have a Chevy Trailblazer.) But "best
cars" don't give you nearly as many stories as "worst
cars" which are also usually your "first cars."
Mine was a '73 Plymouth Fury with a 318 engine, a cassette deck
duct-taped under the dash, and Fred Flintstone rust holes in
the floor that allowed you inspect the asphalt as you were driving!
I'm glad I won't have to worry about taking that vehicle
to Madison.
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